48 S.E. 298 | S.C. | 1904
July 14, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for damages sustained by the plaintiff, on the night of his initiation into a subordinate camp of Woodmen of the World, in consequence of the use of a mechanical goat. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,000.
The assignments of error are as follows:
"1. Because it is respectfully submitted that his Honor, the presiding Judge, erred as a matter of law in charging the jury as follows: `Now, it is argued here by the plaintiff that the subordinate camp is a constituent part of the Sovereign Camp. Now, that is matter of fact for you to find from the testimony, whether it is or not. That involves a different principle than the principle involved in mere agency. If the subordinate camp is a constituent part of the Sovereign Camp, if you find that the subordinate camp is a part of it, then the act of the subordinate camp is the act of the Sovereign Camp, that is the act of one and the same party' — thus leaving it to the jury to interpret the written instruments offered in evidence in which the relation existing between the Sovereign Camp and the subordinate camps were fully set forth, to wit: the articles of incorporation of the Sovereign Camp, the constitution and by-laws of the order and the insurance policy issued by the Sovereign Camp to the members of the subordinate camps.
"2. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in not construing the articles of incorporation, the constitution and by-laws of the order and the insurance policy issued by the *415 Sovereign Camp to the members of the subordinate camp as to whether or not the subordinate camp was a constituent part of the Sovereign Camp, instead of leaving it to the jury to determine as a question of fact what that relation was.
"3. Because his Honor erred in leaving it to the jury to construe the articles of incorporation, the constitution and by-laws of the order, the ritual of the order and the insurance policy issued by the order — all of which were written instruments, and to determine as a question of fact whether or not the subordinate camp was a constituent part of the Sovereign Camp.
"4. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in refusing to charge the jury, `If you find from the evidence that the defendant, Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World, is a fraternal beneficiary association, having power only to collect assessments and dues from its members, to pay death losses, for the erection of monuments and the payment of the legitimate expenses of the management of its business, then you are instructed that the plaintiff is conclusively presumed to have known at the time of his initiation as a member of the local camp at Hickory Grove, that the defendant, Sovereign camp of the Woodmen of the World, was not liable for the torts of the local camp, or its members, and your verdict should be for the defendant, Sovereign Camp.'
"5. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in charging the jury as follows: `Our law does not go so far as to say in a case like that that the plaintiff should be conclusively presumed to have known that the parent camp, I will call it, the Sovereign Camp, would not be liable for its torts. That is a matter of fact for you to find' — thus leaving it to the jury to construe the articles of incorporation, the constitution and by-laws of the Sovereign Camp, the ritual furnished by the Sovereign Camp, and the insurance policy issued by the Sovereign Camp — all of which were written instruments, and determine as a question of fact whether or not the Sovereign Camp was liable for the torts of the members of the subordinate camp. *416
"6. Because his Honor erred in not instructing the jury that the written instruments in evidence above referred to showed that the Sovereign Camp was not liable for the torts of members of the subordinate camps.
"7. Because his Honor erred in refusing defendant's motion for a new trial upon the grounds that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the testimony, and upon the further grounds that his Honor had erred in leaving to the jury to decide as a matter of fact, whether or not the subordinate camp was a constituent part of the Sovereign Camp and whether or not the Sovereign Camp was liable for the torts of the members of the subordinate camp, and in not construing the articles of incorporation, constitution and by-laws and insurance policy.
"8. Because the verdict against the defendant, Sovereign Camp, was contrary to law and evidence, in that it being admitted that there was nothing in the initiatory exercises prescribed and required by the Sovereign Camp that required the use of a mechanical goat, and that the plaintiff, if injured at all, was injured while riding a mechanical goat, the Sovereign Camp was in no way liable for such injury.
"9. Because the verdict was contrary to the law, in that it holds the Sovereign Camp liable for the torts of the members of the subordinate camp.
"10. Because the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, in that the evidence showed that the defendant was not injured, as alleged, while being initiated into the order of the Woodmen of the World.
"11. Because his Honor erred in refusing to allow defendant's counsel to ask Dr. J.D. McDowell, an expert witness for plaintiff, `if Lydston was a standard medical work on genito-urinary and venereal and sexual diseases,' and his Honor further erred in not allowing defendant's counsel to read extracts from said work and ask said witness if said statements were true.
"12. Because his Honor further erred in not allowing defendant's counsel to ask Dr. W.M. Love, an expert witness *417 for defendant, if certain medical works were standard and good authority, and his Honor further erred in refusing to allow defendant's counsel to ask said witness if certain statements in medical works were true, and, also, in refusing to allow defendant's counsel to ask Dr. M.J. Walker, a witness for plaintiff, the same question."
We will first construe the instruments in writing introduced in evidence, for the purpose of ascertaining the relation the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, the subordinate camps, and the members sustained towards each other. In the amended and substituted articles of incorporation of the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, are the following:
"Article I. The name of this corporation is `Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World,' and its principal office and place of business shall be in the city of Omaha and State of Nebraska.
"Article II. This corporation is and shall be a fraternal beneficiary association, formed and carried on for the sole benefit of its members and their beneficiaries, and not for profit. It has and shall continue to have a lodge system, with ritualistic form of work and representative form of government.
"Article III. The object for which this corporation was formed and its plan of doing business are and shall be to combine white male persons between the ages of 18 and 55, of sound bodily health, and exemplary habits and good moral character, who shall be required to pass a satisfactory medical examination, into a secret, fraternal, beneficiary and benevolent order, to provide funds derived from beneficiary calls, assessment and dues collected from its members for the payment of the expenses of conducting the business thereof, and to create a fund to be paid to beneficiaries on the death of a beneficiary member, and to erect a monument at the grave of each deceased beneficiary member, and for such other purposes as the corporation may from time to time determine, not prohibited by the laws of the State of Nebraska. *418
"Article IV. This corporation shall have power through its Sovereign Camp and Executive Council, to provide a constitution and laws, by-laws, rules and regulations for its own government and that of its camps and members, and to alter and amend its constitution, laws, by-laws, rules and regulations at any session of the Sovereign Camp or Sovereign Executive Council. The constitution and laws, by-laws, rules and regulations now in force shall continue in force and effect until altered, amended or repealed. It shall have power to purchase and hold such real and personal property as shall be necessary for its convenience and use, and may sell, transfer or dispose of the same as it may deem necessary. It shall have power to levy assessments and dues on all its members, to fix the amount thereof and the manner of collecting the same. It may contract for the purchase and sale of supplies, paraphernalia, badges and other appliances used in the work and business of the order, and may do all other acts and things necessary to carry out the objects and purposes for which it is organized.
"Article V. * * * The Sovereign Camp shall have and may exercise full legislative power in all matters affecting its management and good of the order. It may provide for the suspension and expulsion of camps and members, for failure to pay assessments, dues or other demands of the Sovereign Camp, or its officers acting under the constitution and laws of the order, and for the violation of the constitution and laws of the order as they now exist or may hereafter be adopted."
The constitution of the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World contains these sections:
"Sec. 81. Camps shall only have such powers as are given by the constitution and laws of the Sovereign Camp. They may adopt by-laws for their own government not inconsistent with the constitution and laws of the Sovereign Camp, but such by-laws must be submitted to and approved by the sovereign commander before taking effect."
There is nothing in the ritual of the order authorizing the use of a mechanical goat as part of the ceremony in the initiation of a member.
In order to accomplish the objects for which the Sovereign Camp was organized it was necessary from the very nature of the business to call to its assistance the services of persons through whom it might act, in transacting the affairs of the order in various localities. It selected and organized local lodges for the purpose of meeting this necessity. Not only the subordinate camps but the members as well, were under the complete direction and control of the parent camp, in whose name the benefit certificates were required by the constitution to be issued; and when a member died, payment of the benefit certificate was to be made by the Sovereign Camp. These facts show that when a person was initiated in a local lodge, he became, to all intents and purposes, a member of the Sovereign Camp. And they further show, under the authority of Blackwell v. Mortgage Co., 65
Our conclusion that the subordinate lodge was the agent of the Sovereign Camp is in harmony with the cases of Supreme *421 Lodge K. of P. v. Withers,
The Court in the case of Hutchison v. Real Estate Co.,
His Honor, the presiding Judge, should have construed the instruments of writing introduced in evidence and in the manner just stated, but his failure to do so was not prejudicial to the appellants, for his charge gave the jury the opportunity of finding against the plaintiff upon a question of fact that should not have been submitted *422 to them. These views dispose of all the exceptions except those numbered eleven and twelve.
The eleventh exception will next be considered. The record shows that the question arose in the following manner: "Doctor, is Lydson a standard medical work on genito-urinary and venereal and sexual diseases? (Mr. Hart: I object; medical books are not evidence; medical books are not evidence except in cases of insanity. Medical books are not evidence in cases of this character.) Q. I will ask him if that is good authority? (Mr. Hart: I object to that. Mr. Brice: This is an expert witness, and the witness had stated that the authorities, medical authorities, that is what the witness means, state that a man can have an injury so slight as not to be noticed at the time and yet serious results follow. I am not introducing the authority, I am simply asking him whether this is an authority. The Court: The object of the question is to introduce the book? Mr. Brice: I am simply going to ask him if this is an authority, and read him a piece and ask him if that is good authority or not? The Court: That introduces the book. You wish to contradict or qualify the opinion of the doctor on the stand. Otherwise it would be irrelevant. Testimony excluded. Exception taken.)" The presiding Judge simply ruled that you could not contradict or qualify the opinion of the doctor on the stand by showing what some author had said. In this there was no error.
We proceed to consider the last exception. The question presented by this exception arose as follows: "Q. Doctor, which one of the testicles are these tubercular germs more likely to attack? A. Well, sir, the right testicle is more susceptible to tubercular diseases than the left. There has never been any logical reason given why it is the case. Q. But you state that to be the fact? A. Yes, sir; in eighty per cent., eight cases out of ten. Eight cases out of ten occur in the right testicle. (Mr. Hart: You are giving your own experience, nothing that is recorded? A. It is an opinion based on what I have read, not what I have seen. Q. That *423 is your opinion? A. It is an opinion based on what I have read. Mr. Hart: The witness is still referring to authorities. The Court: Just give your opinion. The witness: Your Honor, I don't know how to answer that question. If your Honor tells me not to answer that question, I will not do so. The Court: When they ask a question, tell what you know, what your experience has been, what your opinion is.)" This ruling was not erroneous, as it allowed the witness to state his opinion.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.